Originally posted by germcevoy:I'm loving mine and haven't missed my tablet one bit so far. It all comes down to use case. I wasn't a regular windows or Mac user so there's nothing that I've sacrificed by getting a Chromebook.
I hear they can be limiting for offline use so again it's something to consider depending on where you will be using it.
I'm Hally to answer any more specific questions. It is a lot more 'normal' to use than some would have you believe.
Originally posted by RattleandHum1988:[..]
Right on.
I mean the big cons for tablets for me have always been:
-my smartphone can do everything this can do
-there's no keyboard
And that's basically it. And like I said, I have a PC that I built which suits all of those Windows needs. I'm just looking for something I can sort of keep notes on, check email, surf the web, even use the chromecast I just bought with (even though my smartphone does that). The biggest plus for me right now is that it's super affordable.
I guess my questions may be:
-What's the OS like? Hard to use? Easy to use? Barely need to use it at all?
-How fast is it? I know most of them have a pretty small hard drive (like 16GB) and I'm wondering if just a few downloads will bog that baby down a little bit.
-Just for something like writing notes, is it as easy as downloading a word processing google app and typing away and saving it as a doc?
I'm sure I had a few more but that's all I can think of for now. Thanks for the help!
Originally posted by RattleandHum1988:Thanks for the info.
I'm torn! A lot of companies (Asus, HP) are releasing "chromebook killers" this holiday in the form of $199 laptops that support windows 8 and installing of actual programs and stuff. I suppose the only caveat is that they have pretty similar specs to the chromebooks, so installing a ton of software on them and trying to run it all probably wouldn't work that well anyway.
Decisions.